District One - Jamilla Argentaria
It appeared to her that Kase was ready to give up. She had been utterly amazed to find him alive, considering she'd left him for dead when she thought that he wasn't going to make it. Jace had only found him after she stumbled away from Orion's room. There had been no cheesy, overly-dramatic reunion. That hasn't been on the list of things she had expected from Kase, though death had been on that list but he was still breathing.
They'd been slouched against the tunnel wall since she'd finished cleaning up his impressive head wound. Though she'd never been patient enough to practice it, she knew enough first aid to keep him from dying. And to feel redeemed after leaving him to die in the first place. Though it might've been more worth it if they'd done more than sit in sullen silence for hours.
And then the entire hallway had started to shake. She'd cried out as she fell against Kase and nearly bit through her tongue trying to muffle the sound. The knife she'd been holding had scraped across the palm of her hand, giving her a rather nasty cut that stung more than she'd expected it to. Part of her wanted to take the time to bandage it- she knew enough about infection to know that open wounds were bad- but the crumbling of the tunnel walls made running a bigger priority.
It was much harder to run in a shaking tunnel than she'd thought it would be. Earthquake preparedness had not been part of her Academy curriculum and she'd never expected that to be an issue. Jace was trying to hard to keep her legs from buckling underneath her. The closest she'd ever come to this feeling was walking across the rope bridge that she and Orion had made as children. And that wasn't enough to prepare her to run for her life when she could barely stand, that's for sure.
She was halfway down the tunnel before she realized that Kase wasn't behind her. A string of curses escaped her as she stopped, considering the possibility of just leaving him behind. She'd been taught that your ally's life isn't always worth yours and despite the fact that there were rocks falling down around her, she was stuck debating whether or not this was one of those times. Was Kase worth her life?
Jace knew that turning around would probably be one of the worse choices she'd ever make but after leaving him to die once, she knew that she couldn't leave Kase behind. At least if she KNEW he was dead this time, she could save herself without feeling guilty. So she turned around- against any ounce of good judgment she possessed- and ran back down the tunnel. Fissures were beginning to appear in the flood and a cannon exploded into being.
If this was how she died, it would be because of her own stupidity.
"Kase! Kase, where are you!? Kase!" Despite her frustration, she didn't let out another torrent of swears until she got back to where her ally had been and found only a stranger's body in his place. It was a girl, she wasn't sure which was one, but the large pool of blood on the tunnel floor convinced her to keep going.
After running for what felt like ages, trying not to get murdered by falling rocks or a tragic misstep, she came to a dead end. Or rather, a large pile of rocks that cut her off from the other side of the tunnel. Jace stopped cold when she got there. That was it, that was the stupid move that would get her killed. She hissed out a sigh before heading back the way she came and praying that it wasn't too late.
Which, if truth be told, it probably was. She tried to keep herself calm but the desperation was starting to get to her. One of the trainers at the Academy, probably her least favorite out of them all, had once told her that untimely panic was likely to be the end of her in the Games. She'd replied with a snarky insult and a well-placed slash with her sword. He'd needed ten stitches and Jace had been forbidden from sparring with others for almost a year.
Now she could see why he had said it. Her heart was pounding in her chest and it wasn't just from running away from the destruction. Jace was genuinely afraid for the first time since the Games had begun. Tributes, she could definitely handle. She had proven that mutts weren't a problem for her. Psychological tests hadn't taken her down yet. But she was powerless against the elements, real or artificial. Jace hadn't been trained to combat an earthquake.
The ground was rumbling beneath her feet and for a moment, she thought she was going to fall through. She just needed to run, she told herself, running would be the best thing for her chances of survival. This seemed like a perfectly good plan. That is, until she got to a large blockade made of jagged pieces of stone. One that blocked the other side of the tunnel, her escape.
Adrenaline was thrumming through her veins but she had nowhere to go. There was no escape, nowhere she could go. No amount of training or strength or wits could get her out of this. Jace Argentaria, District One's youngest female volunteer in years, was trapped like a bird in a cage. She pressed her palms against the wall of debris like she could shift it with her thin arms. She wasn't strong enough to move a wall of rock but she was desperate enough to try.
What a way to die, she thought bitterly. Of all the ways that her life could end in the Games, it would be something as unmemorable as being crushed under a pile of rubble. Her panicked laugh echoed off the crumbling walls as she ran a shaking hand through her hair. What a way for Jace Argentaria to die. She knocked a few smaller pieces of stone off of the pile but she knew it wouldn't be enough. She'd be stuck. There was no way out, no way.
She considered running but there wasn't anywhere for her to run. Instead of thinking her way out of the situation, all she could do was stand at the end of the tunnel and stare at the wall that sealed her hate. She could've been a winner, she should've been a winner. But she tried to be a hero instead. Jace should've been more afraid of death than guilt but she'd tried to be a hero instead of a victor.
Another cannon sounded as the walls around her continued to crumble. More cracks appeared beneath her feet and she decided to wait and see which would kill her first. Falling into oblivion might hurt less but being crushed to death would be quicker. It was morbid thinking, made more pathetic by her frustrated tears and the desperate pacing the that she took up while she waited.
What a way for it all to end.
And that's when the ceiling caved in above her. She should've been crushed but instead, she found herself plummeting into darkness as the floor shattered as well. A scream tore itself from her throat and she waved her arms, searching for a way to hang on. But she kept falling. There was nothing she could do, this was how she was to die. And what a way for Jamilla Carnelian Argentaria to die...
Then she hit the ground. Hard. Despite her high pain threshold, the impact made her body scream out in protest. Something had gone wrong, she could feel it, but she was still alive. She wasn't dead yet and the walls were done falling around her. She wasn't sure what had happened, perhaps because she'd just fallen too far and hit the ground too hard, but she wasn't dead yet. Something felt wrong and she could taste blood in her mouth but she wasn't dead yet.
She'd never been so happy to lose consciousness in her life.
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Writer Games | Masquerade of Martyrs & Family Ties
ActionWriter Games: Masquerade of Martyrs: last updated February 3 2015 Writer Games: Family Ties: last updated April 14 2015 Reuploaded with permission from AEKersey 2019